Lenox Hill Hospital nurses Lisa Schavrien and Erin Ainslie Smith have coordinated a volunteer effort to make sure no patient stuck in the Upper East Side hospital on Election Day will miss the chance to cast a ballot.

Smith noted that during the 2016 election, the hospital gave absentee ballot applications to patients on the labor and delivery floor, but she said that initiative only went so far because many had no one to take the applications to the Board of Elections.

So Smith, an assistant nurse manager, vowed to make a change.

“There’s lots of patients in the hospital who didn’t expect to be there,” she said.

The nurses now have some 100 absentee ballot applications on hand. Staffers will distribute the forms Monday to interested patients and collect them by early afternoon.

Then a small band of volunteers, including off-duty nurses, will fan out to ferry the applications to the Boards of Election offices in the five boroughs as well as Nassau, Suffolk and Westchester counties.

The patients will then get absentee ballots to fill out, which the volunteers will take back to the Boards of Election.

Schavrien said the effort wasn’t political, the timing was just right.

“I just think people are just feeling strongly one way or the other,” said Schavrien, an obstetric nurse navigator.

She said she had reached out to top hospitals across the country and couldn’t find any that had a similar initiative.

The voter drive came just in time for expectant parents Chloe and Glen Kendall. The Brooklyn couple recently learned they would have to be at Lenox Hill at 6:30 a.m. Tuesday for doctors to induce labor.

“We take our civic responsibility seriously,” Glen Kendall said. “We never miss the opportunity to vote. It’s just important to us.”

He said he was grateful that the hospital was taking care of delivering their absentee ballots, as well as their first child.